- Warriors hype thrills Tate
- Price says he has to speak to refs
- Setaimata Sa will play in semifinal
- Wiki enjoying extended farewell
- Hohaia's journey from wide-eyed teen to Warrior
- Mixed emotions for Troy Rovelli
- Price backs Warriors' right to home semifinal
- Mannering voted Warriors' best player
- Warriors named unchanged line-up for eliminator
- Fittler looking forward to Auckland atmosphere
- Aussie bookies favour Warriors
- Payoff fever hits Warrior fans
- Witt confident Warriors can repeat the dose
- Warriors beat out Storm in final minutes
- Junior Warriors post season-high score

Warriors hype thrills Tate
19 September 2008 05:02amCentre Brent Tate is a National Rugby League finals veteran, but even he's been "blown away" by the buzz around the New Zealand Warriors this week.
The Warriors host the Sydney Roosters in Auckland tonight with the winners progressing to a showdown next week with Manly for a place in the grand final.
They are favourites to get past the Roosters, a surprise scenario given that they had struggled all season simply to stay in playoff contention.
But their stellar result in Melbourne last weekend, when against the odds they toppled the highly fancied Storm 18-15, changed everything.
Victory at Olympic Park gave them an unexpected return to Mt Smart Stadium and produced a frenzy among their fans.
The ground will be packed with a capacity crowd of 26,000 after tickets sold out in less than 15 minutes on Tuesday.
Before arriving at the Warriors at the start of the year, Tate had had seven straight seasons of finals football with Brisbane, including a premiership-winning campaign in 2006.
But even he was taken back by the excitement over the Warriors post-Melbourne.
"It's blown me away," Tate said.
"There's such a buzz around the place. It's very exciting."
Tate warned that the flipside was the need for the Warriors to guard against being overwhelmed by the hype.
"It's such a great feeling, but it's also a challenge for us to keep it in check."
One thing the Warriors wouldn't be crushed by was the weight of expectation, Tate said.
